Three-dimensional spatial representation in freely swimming fish.

Research on spatial cognition has focused on how animals encode the horizontal component of space. However, most animals travel vertically within their environments, particularly those that fly or swim. Pelagic fish move with six degrees of freedom and must integrate these components to navigate acc...

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主要な著者: De Perera, T, Holbrook, R
フォーマット: Journal article
言語:English
出版事項: 2012
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author De Perera, T
Holbrook, R
author_facet De Perera, T
Holbrook, R
author_sort De Perera, T
collection OXFORD
description Research on spatial cognition has focused on how animals encode the horizontal component of space. However, most animals travel vertically within their environments, particularly those that fly or swim. Pelagic fish move with six degrees of freedom and must integrate these components to navigate accurately--how do they do this? Using an assay based on associative learning of the vertical and horizontal components of space within a rotating Y-maze, we found that fish (Astyanax fasciatus) learned and remembered information from both horizontal and vertical axes when they were presented either separately or as an integrated three-dimensional unit. When information from the two components conflicted, the fish used the previously learned vertical information in preference to the horizontal. This not only demonstrates that the horizontal and vertical components are stored separately in the fishes' representation of space (simplifying the problem of 3D navigation), but also suggests that the vertical axis contains particularly salient spatial cues--presumably including hydrostatic pressure. To explore this latter possibility, we developed a physical theoretical model that shows how fish could determine their absolute depth using pressure. We next considered full volumetric spatial cognition. Astyanax were trained to swim towards a reward in a Y-maze that could be rotated, before the arms were removed during probe trials. The subjects were tracked in three dimensions as they swam freely through the surrounding cubic tank. The results revealed that fish are able to accurately encode metric information in a volume, and that the error accrued in the horizontal and vertical axes whilst swimming in probe trials was similar. Together, these experiments demonstrate that unlike in surface-bound rats, the vertical component of the representation of space is vitally important to fishes. We hypothesise that the representation of space in the brain of vertebrates could ultimately be shaped by the number of the degrees of freedom of movement that binds the navigating animal.
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spelling oxford-uuid:afa9330e-f6ec-4a79-b5cc-56c890c1abaa2022-03-27T03:50:54ZThree-dimensional spatial representation in freely swimming fish.Journal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:afa9330e-f6ec-4a79-b5cc-56c890c1abaaEnglishSymplectic Elements at Oxford2012De Perera, THolbrook, RResearch on spatial cognition has focused on how animals encode the horizontal component of space. However, most animals travel vertically within their environments, particularly those that fly or swim. Pelagic fish move with six degrees of freedom and must integrate these components to navigate accurately--how do they do this? Using an assay based on associative learning of the vertical and horizontal components of space within a rotating Y-maze, we found that fish (Astyanax fasciatus) learned and remembered information from both horizontal and vertical axes when they were presented either separately or as an integrated three-dimensional unit. When information from the two components conflicted, the fish used the previously learned vertical information in preference to the horizontal. This not only demonstrates that the horizontal and vertical components are stored separately in the fishes' representation of space (simplifying the problem of 3D navigation), but also suggests that the vertical axis contains particularly salient spatial cues--presumably including hydrostatic pressure. To explore this latter possibility, we developed a physical theoretical model that shows how fish could determine their absolute depth using pressure. We next considered full volumetric spatial cognition. Astyanax were trained to swim towards a reward in a Y-maze that could be rotated, before the arms were removed during probe trials. The subjects were tracked in three dimensions as they swam freely through the surrounding cubic tank. The results revealed that fish are able to accurately encode metric information in a volume, and that the error accrued in the horizontal and vertical axes whilst swimming in probe trials was similar. Together, these experiments demonstrate that unlike in surface-bound rats, the vertical component of the representation of space is vitally important to fishes. We hypothesise that the representation of space in the brain of vertebrates could ultimately be shaped by the number of the degrees of freedom of movement that binds the navigating animal.
spellingShingle De Perera, T
Holbrook, R
Three-dimensional spatial representation in freely swimming fish.
title Three-dimensional spatial representation in freely swimming fish.
title_full Three-dimensional spatial representation in freely swimming fish.
title_fullStr Three-dimensional spatial representation in freely swimming fish.
title_full_unstemmed Three-dimensional spatial representation in freely swimming fish.
title_short Three-dimensional spatial representation in freely swimming fish.
title_sort three dimensional spatial representation in freely swimming fish
work_keys_str_mv AT depererat threedimensionalspatialrepresentationinfreelyswimmingfish
AT holbrookr threedimensionalspatialrepresentationinfreelyswimmingfish